scispace - formally typeset
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Max-min d-cluster formation in wireless ad hoc networks

TLDR
A heuristic to form d-clusters in a wireless ad hoc network that tends to re-elect existing clusterheads even when the network configuration changes and has a tendency to evenly distribute the mobile nodes among the clusterheads, and evently distribute the responsibility of acting as clusterheads among all nodes.
Abstract: 
An ad hoc network may be logically represented as a set of clusters. The clusterheads form a d-hop dominating set. Each node is at most d hops from a clusterhead. Clusterheads form a virtual backbone and may be used to route packets for nodes in their cluster. Previous heuristics restricted themselves to 1-hop clusters. We show that the minimum d-hop dominating set problem is NP-complete. Then we present a heuristic to form d-clusters in a wireless ad hoc network. Nodes are assumed to have a non-deterministic mobility pattern. Clusters are formed by diffusing node identities along the wireless links. When the heuristic terminates, a node either becomes a clusterhead, or is at most d wireless hops away from its clusterhead. The value of d is a parameter of the heuristic. The heuristic can be run either at regular intervals, or whenever the network configuration changes. One of the features of the heuristic is that it tends to re-elect existing clusterheads even when the network configuration changes. This helps to reduce the communication overheads during transition from old clusterheads to new clusterheads. Also, there is a tendency to evenly distribute the mobile nodes among the clusterheads, and evently distribute the responsibility of acting as clusterheads among all nodes. Thus, the heuristic is fair and stable. Simulation experiments demonstrate that the proposed heuristic is better than the two earlier heuristics, namely the LCA and degree-based solutions.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Node Clustering in Wireless Sensor Networks by Considering Structural Characteristics of the Network Graph

TL;DR: A novel distributed clustering protocol for wireless sensor networks is proposed, based on a novel metric for characterizing the importance of a node, w.r.t. its contribution in relaying messages, and achieves small communication complexity and linear computation complexity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Achieving robust message authentication in sensor networks: a public-key based approach

TL;DR: Li et al. as mentioned in this paper presented a public-key based false data filtering scheme that leverages Shamir's threshold cryptography and Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC), and effectively rejected 100% of false data packets.
Dissertation

Energy-Efficient Self-Organization for Wireless Sensor Networks

TL;DR: This thesis work proposes a medium access control protocol which avoids maintaining neighbourhood tables at each sensor, which provides robustness against topological changes, and uses virtual coordinates as a basis for self-organizing a wireless sensor network.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Multi-channel polling in multi-hop clusters of hybrid sensor networks

TL;DR: Simulation results show that multi-channel polling algorithm shortens the active time of sensor nodes by a significant amount compared to single channel polling, and the proposed algorithm is very suitable for applications such as large scale environment monitoring.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

An energy efficient collaborative framework for event notification in wireless sensor networks

TL;DR: Through extensive simulations, it is shown that there is a significant reduction in the overall network traffic thereby, saving energy at the nodes responsible for originating response traffic and also at nodes, which handle the route-through traffic.
References
More filters
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Highly dynamic Destination-Sequenced Distance-Vector routing (DSDV) for mobile computers

TL;DR: The modifications address some of the previous objections to the use of Bellman-Ford, related to the poor looping properties of such algorithms in the face of broken links and the resulting time dependent nature of the interconnection topology describing the links between the Mobile hosts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Approximation algorithms for combinatorial problems

TL;DR: For the problem of finding the maximum clique in a graph, no algorithm has been found for which the ratio does not grow at least as fast as n^@e, where n is the problem size and @e>0 depends on the algorithm.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A highly adaptive distributed routing algorithm for mobile wireless networks

TL;DR: The proposed protocol is a new distributed routing protocol for mobile, multihop, wireless networks that is highly adaptive, efficient and scalable; being best-suited for use in large, dense, mobile networks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multicluster, mobile, multimedia radio network

TL;DR: A multi-cluster, multi-hop packet radio network architecture for wireless adaptive mobile information systems is presented that supports multimedia traffic and relies on both time division and code division access schemes.
Journal ArticleDOI

A design concept for reliable mobile radio networks with frequency hopping signaling

TL;DR: This paper outlines those features that distinguish the High Frequency (HF) Intra Task Force (ITF) Network from other packet radio networks, and presents a design concept for this network that encompasses organizational structure, waveform design, and channel access.
Related Papers (5)